Welcome Chlamydia Pneumoniae Help and Treatment.

Cpnhelp.org: A website devoted to the understanding and treatment of Chlamydia Pneumoniae, an infectious bacteria implicated in a number of human illnesses. Cpnhelp.org is a non-commercial, website run and supported by volunteers, and does not take monetary or other assistance from any other sources.

www.cpnhelp.org was started by educated patients who are themselves undergoing combination antibiotic treatment of diseases where Cpn has been implicated, including:

Why this website?

Chlamydia Pneumoniae (Cpn) has been implicated in such a wide variety of diseases that information about its treatment and science is scattered about the web and tends to be focused on just one of these illnesses. We hope to be a central source of information, which will allow us to share findings and compare treatment responses across the variety of problems Cpn causes. Work by Charles Stratton et al, extended by British physician David Wheldon has formulated Combination Antibiotic Protocols (CAP's) to treat the multiple life phases of Cpn and fully eradicate this persistent infection.

What makes Chlamydia Pneumoniae (Cpn) so troublesome?

While it may start as a respiratory infection, Cpn can be carried to other parts of the body and infect many other tissues, including nerve tissue, the brain, muscles, the lining of blood vessels and even your immune cells (macrophages).

Standard single antibiotic courses (two weeks) only kill Cpn in one of its three life phases, leaving live forms of Cpn bacteria which are in other stages to renew infection.

Cpn infects inside your cells and parasitically steals energy from your own body cells in order to replicate.

The only way to cure it is to take a combination of antibiotics, to kill it in all of its life phases so nothing is left behind to re-infect.

New to understanding Chlamydia pneumonia?

Our suggestion is to read the forums and comments after you have gotten a basic understanding of Cpn and the treatment process. Forums are often discussions of material which might not make much sense without context, and blogs may be expressions of people in the midst of a challenging moment in treatment, not necessarily typical of what one would expect on the protocol.

Good places to start:

Patient Stories: A great way to see how people with different disease diagnoses have responded to a CAP for Cpn.

Getting Started: A clear outline of the whole treatment with FAQ's. Serves as a great guideline to reading the more detailed Handbook, as well as a ready reference during the treatment process.

Cpn Simple- The most basic description of Cpn and the antibiotic agents which address the different phases of the Cpn life cycle.

The Basics- Questions and answers about Cpn and its treatment. Kind of the Cpn FAQ's.

The Cpn Treatment Handbook- This is the material organized in book form which has all the information gathered in one place for treatment using a CAP. Take a look at the Table of Contents page for an overview. This one takes some time to digest. If you go to the Table of Contents page and click "print friendly link" you well be taken to a printable text, about 50+ pages, you can save or print out to digest at your leisure.

If you have Multiple Sclerosis- Skip the above and first read through David Wheldon's wonderful website on treating MS through an empirical protocol to treat Chlamydia pneumoniae. It is specifically geared to present the case for this in MS, and is very cogently layed out. Come to think of it, you should read through his site even if you are looking to treat Chlamydia pneumoniae for diseases other than MS.

Forums and Blogs give an idea of the wonderful community of support and encouragement, as well as intelligent discussion available as a user.

If you are interested in research articles, that link will lead to references to scientific papers on Cpn and related subjects.

You don't have to register to use the information on this website, but you won’t be able to see all the comments or post any comments, questions, or forums unless you are a registered user. Register! It's easy and allows you to be a full member of our community.Post and comment: Don't be shy! Your comments, posts on forums, feedback, blogs are what will make this a real community, helping and serving each other.

When you register, you can go to 'my account' and alter the way you wish your home page to appear. Alternately, many people use the 'recent posts' page as their home page link for the site on their browser. This gives only new posts when you check in, so you don't have to wander willy-nilly through the comments and forums!

Help Us Get to the Top of Google:

1, go to wikipedia, find relevent articles and place links from there, to this site. 2, Get other websites to link to this site using this code:

Then when people type into google "Chlamydia Pneumoniae Treatment" we will come No1 Instead of all the nonsense that is there now.

Note to members:

Please use Blog Entry for on-going commentary only, such a as a treatment log, editorial comments, rant, etc.

If you have a question or one-time comment, please use a Forum post.This will help keep discussions and questions together and help others engage in dialogue, and preserve Blogs for on-going types of entries.

Kent, it is good to have Jim's picture on the front page because it shows that there is a real person about, but not to have a link right below leading to his rather ancient blogs.

Also, the script need to have wider margins to make it more readable on a PC: not everyone just uses cellphones! When I am doing work on my websites I constantly change from screen to screen to make sure that what works on one, works on everything.

I'm happy to have my black cat back!

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

Kent, briefly this morning I could get to more places on the site from the front page than Jim's blog but not by noon! Now I can't even see if anybody is online. I hope it won't take long to sort everything out.......................

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

Look, now we have Jim's image on the front page, where it never was before and can't find the forums or recent posts, the second off which I used as the home page Also, people who join need to be able to ask questions.

It is past my bedtime now!

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

One thing before I go: it does not look good to have a link to Jim's most recent blogs ion the first. page when the date is way over then years ago!

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

Jim, I am getting mail from ill people: you must do something or allow Mac and me to.

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

Kent, can you at least make it so that when I press on one of the links on this page, I actually get what I click on, rather than ending back here? It surely can't be that difficult.

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

At the end of last week, I decided to buy a new web-name and web-space from the people who supply both David and myself. For ages they have been asking me if they could build my web-space but I have always said that my work needed lots of space, so as long as I had that, I could do it all myself.

Now though, I have decided that I will allow them to build a new web-space. The name I have bought is www.cpnhelp.com and it should be up and running in three weeks time. The space comes with a spam-mail filter which is updated every year.

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

Sarah, upon checking your My Account I found that you had selected the Seven theme which is not configured for much. I have disabled all unconfigured themes from the theme selection and changed your theme to Mayo which is the one I have done most of my work on.

To change the colors of your personal theme on cpnhelp.org go to My Account, edit, and select Mayo. Then choose a color scheme!

Kent, I was using Mayo until three days ago but nothing more works on it now than before.

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

I’m afraid this site has been wrecked though sheer incompetence. I shall leave it. I am sorry to do so. A new site is propositioned by Sarah and Mackintosh. I wish it well. Ill persons need a reliable place in which to work, to give their stories, to give and receive private messages, and to retrieve reliable data. (Other medical doctors have communicated the same.)

Here's a clear illustration of one of my issues with responses to posts. I just responded 'nope, but good luck' to Supaguy's earlier post asking if this is a blog post and announcing his latest pulse'.

Yet, because my response doesn't appear attached to Supaguy's post, it now appears I responded 'nope, but good luck' to Dr. Wheldon.

The difference between what we do and what we are capable of doing would suffice to solve most of the world’s problems. Mohandas Gandhi

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

Thank-you Kent for yesterday's work , even though it should have been done offline. Most sites doing a big upgrade take the site off-line for a couple of days. I still have a few remarks but I will put them in the appropriate places!

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

This is one thing that needs changing: the ability to edit titles as well as posts!

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

I guess he won't leave, because of all the changes which suddenly happened!

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

Ah, about half the patient stories are working, starting at the bottom, so I guess Kent is still working his way up.

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

I'm posting this here because maybe more people will see it, but if you are one of the many who have sight difficulties, if you use 'Earth' as the colour scheme, the white background behind the text is a broken white and the surroundings are gentle earthy colours. You might find this less tiring on your eyes.

Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.

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